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CITIZENSHIP

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CHILDERN IN A DEMOCRACY - University of Sioux Falls ... citizenship – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CITIZENSHIP


1
CITIZENSHIP
2
  • Athens was the site of the first democracy.
  • Citizenship is an idea born in ancient Greece.

3
What is a Citizen?
  • To be a citizen is to hold a position of rights
    and responsibilities in a society. In a
    democratic society such as ours, citizens are
    rulers. The government belongs to the people.
  • If you were born in this country you are a U.S
    citizen. If your parents are U.S. citizens, but
    you were born in another country, you are also a
    U.S. citizen. Citizens enjoy many freedoms and
    rights. Citizens may vote in elections. They can
    even run for political office. They also have
    many duties such as paying taxes and defending
    their country.

4
CLASSROOM
  • Your classroom is a miniature of a democratic
    society. You and your students are citizens of
    your classroom and school.

5
Keep in mind the old saying that children learn
what they live.
  • They are shaped by their experiences. So, to
    teach and learn citizenship with children, we
    must create a democratic society for them to live
    in. We need to treat children as more than just
    students in our classroom but also citizens in
    our classroom.

6
CLASSROOM DEMOCRACY
  • In making the classroom a miniature democracy,
    the children you work with will be
    self-governing. This means major responsibilities
    for each child. This also means major rights for
    each child. You need to create an atmosphere of
    cooperation, courtesy behavior, and discipline.
    The means there needs to be activities that
    included team building, working and playing
    together, and an atmosphere of support for each
    other, and a commitment to individual and
    collective interests.

7
CLASS ACTIVITIES
  • The class meetings, the shared decision making,
    the team work and projects, the informal
    discussions, and the civil society that you
    create in your classroom will be the foundation.
    As students become citizens of the classroom, you
    will set the stage for the next step, that is,
    learning the history and traditions of
    citizenship.

8
CLASSROOM CIVIL SOCIETY
  • This is the academic knowledge that you and your
    fellow citizens will apply as your classroom
    becomes a civil society. School and community
    service projects will follow as students begin to
    understand that citizenship involves reaching out
    to others, participating in the public square,
    and respecting the rights of their fellow human
    beings.

9
JOHN DEWEY
  • When John Dewey wrote that knowledge comes to
    life in activity, he was saying that textbook
    information without application and testing in
    experiences is dead knowledge. In the sense of
    his quote, your classroom becomes an experience
    in democracy! You and your students are testing
    each day the ideas of rights and
    responsibilities, freedom and duty, and civility
    (courtesy behavior) and collaboration.

10
What is the Citizens Role in American Democracy?
  • Young children learn about individual
    responsibility by helping to make classroom rules
    and learning to follow them. They also learn that
    people must take responsibility for their
    actions. These early experiences serve as the
    foundation for increasingly sophisticated
    experiences throughout the succeeding school
    years.

11
SCHOOL IS A COMMUNITY OF LEARNERS
  • This implies that the children and teachers,
    administrators, and support staff who go there
    will find themselves in a communal setting. A
    true community is a relational place where people
    work together, play together, and share their
    thoughts, feelings, and dreams.

12
JEAN PIAGET and LEV VYGOTSKY
  • These theorists have addressed the ideas of
    social knowledge. Social knowledge arises from
    shared group experience. When children and
    teachers play and work together on projects,
    activities, and other aspects of school life,
    they become bonded through their commonly held
    knowledge and collective memory. This leads to a
    sense of community, a sense of belonging the
    beginning of citizenship.

13
CITIZENSHIP EDUCATION
  • Teaching citizenship education to young children
    is one of the most important contributions you
    can make as a teacher. The children you teach
    will assume positions of leadership and
    responsibility well into the 21st century.
  • Citizenship education at its best takes place at
    two separate but related levels that we can call
    the formal and the informal.

14
CITIZENSHIP EDUCATION
  • Formal citizenship education involves the
    academic study of history, civics, literature,
    the arts, and other subjects. Students need to
    learn the functions of political systems at the
    local, state, and national levels. They need to
    understand the relationship of the United States
    to other countries.

15
CITIZENSHIP EDUCATION
  • Informal citizenship education is experiential,
    often involving the life of classroom, the
    playground, the community, and the home. Formal
    education initiates the process by exposing the
    children to ideas, but ideas take hold best when
    they are related to direct experience. Examples

16
DIRECT EXPERIENCES
  • Create opportunities for service learning at all
    levels K-12. community projects
  • Make your classroom and school miniature
    democracies
  • Be sure your students have opportunities to work
    with others beyond the classroom volunteering,
    tutoring
  • Connect the classroom to home assign topics for
    students to discuss with their families
  • Take advantage of the opportunities to reflect on
    the social/moral life of school issues related
    to fairness, sharing, cooperation, bullying,
    cheating, or fighting.

17
IN LESSONS
  • Study a wide variety range of topics
  • Use interactive lessons
  • Include service learning
  • Encourage student participation in school
    governance
  • Encourage extracurricular participation
  • Use simulations voting, trials, legislature
    deliberations

18
IN SUMMARY
  • A child is a citizen of a family, classroom,
    school, community, state, country, and the world.
  • Students learn the ideas of citizenship best when
    they are given the opportunities to experience it
    in the classroom, the school, and the community.
  • These environments offer wonderful possibilities
    for participation, cooperation, and team
    building. These are the building blocks of
    citizenship education.

19
Citizenship
  • Do your share to make your school and community
    better Cooperate Get involved in community
    affairs Stay informed vote Be a good
    neighbor Obey laws and rules Respect
    authority Protect the environment Volunteer

20
CITIZEN RAP
  • We are good citizens,
  • You know its true.
  • We are good citizens in all we do.
  • We work hard and respect every rule,
  • Helping the community and our school.
  • We listen, share and always care,
  • We show good citizenship everywhere!

21
BOOKMARK SAYING
  • When all of us work together, we become good
    citizens and our country
  • becomes stronger.
  • Donna Forest

22
Internet Sites
  • Bens Guide to Government
  • Citizens Rights
  • Teaching Citizenships 5 Themes
  • Citizenship WebQuest
  • Citizenship Activities
  • Naturalization Requirements
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